Friday, April 12, 2013

SPE NE Pop-up Conference Lecture Summary


Since I was a bit pinched for time in during my lecture, I didn’t go into quite as much detail as I would have liked in certain areas. We also didn’t have time for a formal Q and A session, but I did have many interesting conversations afterwards, during the reception, most of which revolved around these two topics:

1. Extolling the virtues of Instagram

During my lecture, I spent a good bit of time discussing Instagram as a wonderful vehicle for capturing and disseminating images. If you are concerned about the Instagram / Facebook terms of service then there are other options, such as Twitter or Flickr Mobile. (In fact, I really like Flickr Mobile, but my network is on Instagram.) Personally, I have never put too much importance on the “ownership” of my images online. I realize this puts me in the minority, but I view the networking capabilities provided by the Internet as a whole to be a fair trade, and acceptable risk, for the possible “theft” of my work. If you are worried about your work being “stolen” from the Internet, then don’t put it there – theft is but a screen-grab away.

What is important to recognize, which I did not have a chance to discuss in my lecture, is that Insatgram is not solely an image-making practice. Rather, it is, like Twitter, Flickr, or Facebook, its own communication platform and network. It allows photographers to communicate in a native, image-based language. And it also incorporates social media language conventions – abbreviated messages, hashtags, and even Emojis. Hashtags function as both a means of tagging, or connecting, images but also as a form of commentary. This element of commentary particularly applies to the use of ironic hashtags – those hashtags that are too long or too specific or are, generally, never going to be typed into a search field: #OMGicantbelievethisguyisseriousaboutteachingInstagram

I also mentioned reading Ron Cowie’s interview on the Photo-Eye blog on my phone and described how that re-presentation of his photographs, on a mobile-specific platform, is much different than merely presenting physical work as a digital projection (and in the case of Ron’s work, viewing postage stamp sized versions of beautiful platinum palladium prints on my phone is certainly a new contextualization of very traditional photographic information).

Overall, my discussion of Instagram and mobile-specific photographic practice was meant to provide an example of how digital photography has fundamentally changed the nature of photographic information – and how it has changed the way we consume that information – and that we need to consider these changes in our teaching.

2. Teaching photography in the post-print era

In the past, the medium of photography sold itself. The very hands-on nature of teaching students how to handle film and manual cameras, how to load film onto reels in the dark, how to handle paper in the darkroom – all of this “process” - allowed students to take ownership of the things they created. Once this foundation was established, we, as educators, could direct students down any number of avenues to further their photographic educations.

However, with teaching digital photography, if we limit our curriculum to a digital version of analog photography, then we risk having our courses look like a series of digital imaging tutorials – and who wants to pay for that? Or, how many students will sign up for (and pay for) a second photo course. In other words, if we don’t explore, engage in, and provide critical foundations for the unique and (relatively) new nature of digital imagery, then why would we expect students to pursue an extended and in-depth study of photography? Which begs the question posed in the last link I presented: Do I Need a Photo Degree?

And to extend this out a bit – I had a few conversations about enrollment and curricular issues in photo courses – if enrollment numbers for photo classes drop and budgets get tightened (as seems to be happening everywhere – and which always seems to affect the arts first and/or most profoundly) – as course loads for faculty are cut, as positions are downgraded or eliminated, as course offerings are cut – new voices and new ideas will be marginalized. If we can’t offer a new product to prospective students then why should we expect enrollment numbers to do anything but drop?

-Edward

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